eel7566 wrote:I got my letter today...I'm in! I went complete 1/26 and went in review 2/1 I believe.

I'm extremely excited. This was a target school for me, and its NYC location is tremendously appealing.

Their scholarship offer of 30,000 a year was also a very nice touch. I don't know what I would do between this and Brooklyn @ sticker (I'm still in review there).

Good luck to those still waiting to hear. PM me for stats if interested.

I think they're too close to think about paying an extra 100gs to go to Brooklyn. They're so similar.

This is so interesting to me because, based on what I can tell from law school numbers, I'm looking at waitlist/accepted to Brooklyn (with no money), and St. john's pays me 30G's. Go figure. I think I would like the Brooklyn location more, but the vibe I'm getting is that my prospects would not be that much better at Brooklyn...not enough to account for the large difference in tuition.

champ33 wrote:If you're in at STJ with 30/yr, you are going to be accepted to Brooklyn with similar $$ as well. Scholarship from Brooklyn comes late Feb. - early March.

Hey, that would be fantastic, but I don't think that is correct. Brooklyn's LSAT #'s are a few points higher--I'm very competitive at St. John's (above the median) but bringing up the rear at Brooklyn (at the 25%.)

+1...is there some indicator of whether or not this is good news? Like an email follow up for acceptances, nothing for rejections, etc?

Acceptance came via snail mail with no e-mail notification. Scholarship was included. It says at the top of the status checker that they only give decisions via snail mail, so I don't think you can really read into anything until you actually get the packet (which is belying small for admittances).

champ33 wrote:If you're in at STJ with 30/yr, you are going to be accepted to Brooklyn with similar $$ as well. Scholarship from Brooklyn comes late Feb. - early March.

Hey, that would be fantastic, but I don't think that is correct. Brooklyn's LSAT #'s are a few points higher--I'm very competitive at St. John's (above the median) but bringing up the rear at Brooklyn (at the 25%.)

Than again, I've never done this before.

You may be right. The initial offer could be a little smaller, but you will get something if you have 30 at STJ. Also, T2 schools in the same region tend to match their pier's offers, as I found with BLS last year. I sent my scholarships to STJ and Rutgers to them and they bumped mine up a bit to match.

eel7566 wrote:I got my letter today...I'm in! I went complete 1/26 and went in review 2/1 I believe.

I'm extremely excited. This was a target school for me, and its NYC location is tremendously appealing.

Their scholarship offer of 30,000 a year was also a very nice touch. I don't know what I would do between this and Brooklyn @ sticker (I'm still in review there).

Good luck to those still waiting to hear. PM me for stats if interested.

I think they're too close to think about paying an extra 100gs to go to Brooklyn. They're so similar.

This is so interesting to me because, based on what I can tell from law school numbers, I'm looking at waitlist/accepted to Brooklyn (with no money), and St. john's pays me 30G's. Go figure. I think I would like the Brooklyn location more, but the vibe I'm getting is that my prospects would not be that much better at Brooklyn...not enough to account for the large difference in tuition.

St. John's is in a MUCH better location - its less congested and the campus is aesthetically nicer; I will most likely be attending (accepted in Nov with a full scholarship)

eel7566 wrote:I got my letter today...I'm in! I went complete 1/26 and went in review 2/1 I believe.

I'm extremely excited. This was a target school for me, and its NYC location is tremendously appealing.

Their scholarship offer of 30,000 a year was also a very nice touch. I don't know what I would do between this and Brooklyn @ sticker (I'm still in review there).

Good luck to those still waiting to hear. PM me for stats if interested.

I think they're too close to think about paying an extra 100gs to go to Brooklyn. They're so similar.

This is so interesting to me because, based on what I can tell from law school numbers, I'm looking at waitlist/accepted to Brooklyn (with no money), and St. john's pays me 30G's. Go figure. I think I would like the Brooklyn location more, but the vibe I'm getting is that my prospects would not be that much better at Brooklyn...not enough to account for the large difference in tuition.

St. John's is in a MUCH better location - its less congested and the campus is aesthetically nicer; I will most likely be attending (accepted in Nov with a full scholarship)

While I agree you should follow the money and therefore a cheap St. John's is much better than an expensive Brooklyn, I hate St. John's location. Campus is nice, but the area boring and lackluster - in my opinion. I live in Queens too, but Brooklyn Law School provides a real urban environment with tons to see and do. That includes all the courts literally across the street. The area certainly is less congested as the above poster suggested, but to me it feels like a suburb of NY, and not the actual city itself.

In the end though, go to St. John's to save money. These are peer schools, so to do otherwise would be madness.

Edit: Congrats to all those accepted to St. John's, I am surprisingly still waiting to hear from them. They are taking their time with me.

While I agree you should follow the money and therefore a cheap St. John's is much better than an expensive Brooklyn, I hate St. John's location. Campus is nice, but the area boring and lackluster - in my opinion. I live in Queens too, but Brooklyn Law School provides a real urban environment with tons to see and do. That includes all the courts literally across the street. The area certainly is less congested as the above poster suggested, but to me it feels like a suburb of NY, and not the actual city itself.

In the end though, go to St. John's to save money. These are peer schools, so to do otherwise would be madness.

Edit: Congrats to all those accepted to St. John's, I am surprisingly still waiting to hear from them. They are taking their time with me.

Yeah, I don't know Queens at all, but I spent a few days last summer just blocks away from Brooklyn Law School's location, and I really liked the feel of the area, the proximity to Williamsburg and Manhattan, a near-by subway stop, etc...

If I get into Brooklyn, I feel like this will be a tough decision for me. I figure St. John's will be cheaper, and the quality of education may be eerily similar, but the urban environment that Justathought talks about is important to me.

While I agree you should follow the money and therefore a cheap St. John's is much better than an expensive Brooklyn, I hate St. John's location. Campus is nice, but the area boring and lackluster - in my opinion. I live in Queens too, but Brooklyn Law School provides a real urban environment with tons to see and do. That includes all the courts literally across the street. The area certainly is less congested as the above poster suggested, but to me it feels like a suburb of NY, and not the actual city itself.

In the end though, go to St. John's to save money. These are peer schools, so to do otherwise would be madness.

Edit: Congrats to all those accepted to St. John's, I am surprisingly still waiting to hear from them. They are taking their time with me.

Yeah, I don't know Queens at all, but I spent a few days last summer just blocks away from Brooklyn Law School's location, and I really liked the feel of the area, the proximity to Williamsburg and Manhattan, a near-by subway stop, etc...

If I get into Brooklyn, I feel like this will be a tough decision for me. I figure St. John's will be cheaper, and the quality of education may be eerily similar, but the urban environment that Justathought talks about is important to me.

Oh, you want an urban environment? Cross over the GCE and make your way to Jamaica ave, oh around 3am.

I kid of course. While most take the Q46 or the other line that heads down Utopia, there is actually an F train stop (169th) that is about 5-8m walk to the Campus. And with Jamaica Highschool no longer open, it's far more quiet. In addition, the front end of campus has several grocery stores, a 7-11 (lol), B&N, etc. A lot has changed in the area since SJU put in dorms and off-campus housing.

I no longer live in Queens but wanted to give you some other information.